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Problems with Floppy Disks

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Problems with Floppy Disks

By Stephen Bucaro

With the advent of the rewritable CD (CD-RW) many people

are predicting the demise of the venerable floppy disk.

Today's computers can even boot from the CD drive. But if

your computer is not connected to a network, there is no

quicker way to back-up or share a file.

Problems with the floppy drive are rare, but that is not

the case with floppy disks themselves. Floppy disks are

made super cheap and are very unreliable. Also, floppy

disks are sensitive to magnetic fields. If you place a

floppy disk on top of your monitor, your computer case, or

any metal object, you risk corrupting the disk. If you

have a problem reading a floppy disk, it is almost always

a bad disk.

Use the following troubleshooting guide:

- Can't read a floppy disk

If you have another system, check to see if the drive in

that system is able to read the disk. If the disk works in

a different drive, begin by checking for obvious problems.

It is not unknown to find an object like a Post-It note or

the metal slide protector from a previous disk stuck

disk). If there are no files already on the disk, try to...

inside a drive.

- Can't write to a floppy disk

Again, begin by checking for obvious problems. Make sure

the floppy disk is not write protected. On a 3.5" disk you

should be able to see through the hole in the upper-right

corner of the disk (looking at the labeled side of the

disk). If there are no files already on the disk, try to

re-format it.

- Can't boot from a floppy drive

If your operating system is Windows 2000, or Windows XP

Professional, you can't boot from a floppy disk with these

systems. Otherwise, make sure the disk you have is a

bootable disk. It needs to have been created as a "startup

disk" or formatted with the "copy system files" option

button selected.

- More complex problems

In order to start faster, today's systems are usually set

in the BIOS to boot from the hard disk drive first. Check

the boot sequence in the BIOS setup. If the boot sequence

starts with the letter of a hard disk drive (like C:), and

that drive is having a problem, the system will never even

attempt to boot from the floppy disk drive. Go to BIOS

setup, and set the boot sequence to start with A.

In some companies, the floppy drives are disabled for

security reasons. This is done by either disabling the

onboard FDD controller in the BIOS setup, or by removing

the power cable or data cable from the drive inside the

computer.

- Weird problems

Sometimes when a technician is working inside a computer,

they will temporarily remove the data cable from the

floppy drive in order to get easier access to another

component. They may fail to replace the cable properly,

or put the cable on backwards. If the floppy drive's LED

is always on, the data cable may be reversed.

Sometimes a floppy disk can be read on the system that it

was originally formatted on, but cannot be read on another

system and vice versa. This is usually caused by the fact

that the head of the floppy drive on one system is out of

alignment.

=> As with all Windows(tm) systems, sometimes the

operating system gets confused. If your system can't

recognize the floppy drive or can't read any floppy disks,

try rebooting the system.

If you are having a problem with a floppy disk, remember

they are made super cheap and are not meant to be reliable,

but they can still serve a very utilitarian purpose.

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